Abstract: | Bulk polymerization of acrylic acid is controlled by linear plurimolecular H-bonded aggregates of the monomer. It is proved that it is not the precipitating medium that is responsible for the accelerated rate of the polymerization, but the presence of the H-bonded plurimolecular aggregates. It has been shown that the presence of the previously formed polymer is important, as it gives a matrix effect which allows the monomer aggregated to be stabilized by associating with the polymer. In polymerizing acrylic acid solutions, two types of solvents have been characterized: first, the polar solvents which do not destroy the H-bonded aggregates up to high dilutions. Then, in the presence of hydrocarbons or chlorinated solvents, 10–20% of the solvents dissociate the aggregates. A very striking parallelism is observed between the polymerization kinetics and the associated form of the monomer. |